Student loans: College professor details 'broken' public servant forgiveness program

A notoriously troubled federal loan forgiveness program for public servants will be getting a "major overhaul" during the Biden administration, and a teacher who successfully saw more than $130,000 in student loan debt erased after 12 years of payments detailed the administrative nightmare to Yahoo Finance.

“The main thing for me was the emotional toll of living with that debt for so long and feeling like the benchmark kept moving,” Kimberly Baker, an associate professor at the University of Northern Iowa, told Yahoo Finance in an interview. “I was doing all the things I was told to do.”

The Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program, created by Congress in 2007, enables government and nonprofit employees — from teachers to soldiers to firefighters and other public servants — with federally-backed student loans to apply for forgiveness after proof of 120 monthly payments under a qualifying repayment plan.

Stories like Baker's show how the PSLF program "is broken," Seth Frotman, a former Student Loan Ombudsman at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and current executive director at the Student Borrower Protection Center (SBPC), a D.C.-based advocacy group, told Yahoo Finance. “And it is time for bold, comprehensive action to deliver debt relief and right a decade of wrongs by the government and the student loan industry. Public service workers have done their part — now it is time for the administration to keep the promise of PSLF.”

A professer writes on a whiteboard at Bunker Hill Community College in Boston, Massachusetts September 8, 2010. (REUTERS/Brian Snyder)
A professer writes on a whiteboard at Bunker Hill Community College in Boston, Massachusetts September 8, 2010. (REUTERS/Brian Snyder) · Brian Snyder / reuters

PSLF bogged down by processing problems

The embattled PSLF program continues to yield an extremely low success rate — in the single digits for years — partly because many borrowers simply did not qualify.

In 2018, Congress provided the Education Department (ED) with $700 million to create the Temporary Expanded Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program (TEPSLF).

As of April 30, the latest date for which federal data is available, both programs still have anemic outcomes: According to Federal Student Aid, PSLF had an approval rate of 2%. Only 3,458 out of 168,702 completed PSLF forms submitted met the requirements for loan forgiveness. TEPSLF had an approval rate of 3.4%, with only 224 forms out of 6,629 forms meeting the government's requirements.

Projections by the loan servicer handling the PSLF program also indicate that only 22% of borrowers are on track for forgiveness in the next five years, according to records obtained by the SBPC.

Education Secretary Miguel Cardona promised to look into the matter. And earlier this month, more than 200 organizations representing millions of public service workers wrote to Cardona about fixing the PSLF program.